Post Tagged with: "water"

BRACK: A hotter South Carolina has some steamy policy impacts

BRACK: A hotter South Carolina has some steamy policy impacts

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Regardless of whether you are a climate change denier or someone who believes that science shows the globe is warming, there’s one thing we can all agree on:  It’s been hot.  Real hot.

Summer’s annual blast furnace of high heat and humidity came earlier than expected this year as the middle of the country dealt with lots of flooding and a whole bunch of freaky tornadoes.

by · 06/03/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
6/3: Dealing with heat; Steamy policy; Sullivan’s Island scenes

6/3: Dealing with heat; Steamy policy; Sullivan’s Island scenes

IN THIS EDITION

FOCUS: Some smart tips to beat the heat
COMMENTARY, Brack:  A hotter South Carolina has some steamy policy impacts
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  Titan Termite & Pest Control
PHOTO ESSAY:  Scenes from Sullivan’s Island
GOOD NEWS: North Charleston seeks an artist-in-residence         
FEEDBACK:  Brack nailed it on budget gimmick
RECOMMENDED: Undaunted Courage, by Richard Gergel
MYSTERY PHOTO: This one could be tough
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Tobacco barns
CALENDAR: Only a few Spoleto days left

by · 06/03/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS: New literary and art collection features S.C. writers, artists

FOCUS: New literary and art collection features S.C. writers, artists

Editor Carol Bass, who lives iduring winter months on Edisto Island, offers an outstanding and fascinating array of poems, paintings, prose and photographs in a new collection, “Ripple Effect: Water Stories.” It includes some of South Carolina’s best writers and artists, such as Jim Harrison, Ben Moise, Josephine Humphreys, Ron Rash and our own Marjory Wentworth.

Bass, who grew up along the Edisto River, described the collection in the preface: “This book, filled with writing and art, was born from my love of a river and my hopes that through art, poetry and love we will grow to understand that rivers are our very own selves.  All rivers of the world are connected to each other just like we are connected to every other person on earth.” Click headline for more — and a great poem.

by · 02/04/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Palmetto Poem